Tornadoes can occur anywhere in the world, except Antarctica.
The UK has seen its share of tornadoes, although most have been under the
F1 damage level. Tornadoes are less likely in England, but are still possible.
The largest tornado in England was probably the London Tornado of 1091. The death toll was unknown.
Yes. Very weak tornadoes are actually not uncommon in England.
England gets about 50 tornadoes a year
England does get tornadoes, however, the vast majority are weak and are unlikely to be reported beyond local news. The last significant tornado in England was an F2 that hit Birmingham in 2005. England is not prone to the violent tornadoes you often hear about in the United States because it has a rather cool climate. The storms that produce strong tornadoes generally need a supply of hot, humid air among other conditions.
It is estimated that England averages about 70 tornadoes per year.
Yes it has had winds over 100 miles an hour, tornadoes and floods.
Yes. England actually gets a fairly high incidence for its size, but tornadoes stronger than F1 are very rare.
They don't. The US has 40 times the number of tornadoes that England has, and they tend to be much more intense- less than 10% of English tornadoes are strong, 42% of US tornadoes are strong storms.
It does, however the tornadoes in England are weak and so rarely make headlines. The reason England rarely sees significant tornadoes is its relatively cool climate, which does not provide much energy to power tornadic thunderstorms. Tornadoes form most easily near the boundary of a very warm, moist air mass.
Sometimes there is tornadoes in england. They are rare though.
tornadoes can occur anytime and any where
Tornadoes are not constructive in any way.
Only very, very, very occasionally.